Charles D. Thompson Jr. is the author of the new book Border Odyssey: Travels Along the U.S./Mexico Divide. His other work includes Spirits of Just Men and The Human Cost of Food. He is a professor at Duke University.
Q:
You write, “I had no solutions to our diplomatic challenges, but I did have
stories that had convinced me we had gotten the border all wrong.” What were
the ways in which people had gotten it wrong, and which stories convinced you
of that?
A:
Most of my interlocutors who have long lived in close proximity to the border —
farmworkers, local government officials, journalists, priests, students,
activists, and a number of businesspeople — believe strongly that working
toward international relations/solutions are better than trying to build a
wall.
Many
have told me about the ways people used to interact across the line, that
family members would cross without harassment, attend a birthday party or
christening, and go back home in time for work. Mexican businesspeople recalled
a time not so long ago when businesses in Mexico used to have so many daytime
customers from the U.S.
The
larger point here is that without interchange, the problem worsens.
Closing off dialogue and interchange, as with the Berlin Wall, creates
misunderstanding and ultimately cultural and financial stagnation.
The
border wall is like the marital living situation of an older couple I once met
near Charlotte, N.C. Or rather I should say I met only the husband.
You
see, these two people were married, but they had built a solid wall through the
middle of their house. He lived on one side, with his own kitchen, bathroom,
bedroom and front door. And she lived on the other, in a mirror image duplex.
What
once had been a house they lived in together became divided literally. The
marriage was destroyed, but still the two continued to live side-by-side. Wouldn’t
it have been much better to work together toward a solution? I thought. I feel
the same way about the U.S. and Mexico.
Calling
for solutions rather than closing off dialogue is the reason for my book. I’m
not alone in thinking that we have got to rewrite the story here. Walls at
least since Joshua fought the battle of Jericho (and the walls came tumbling
down), the Chinese built their Great Wall, and Berlin became divided have been
untenable ideas. Walls have never been political solutions.
Q:
In recent decades, how much have migrant workers’ lives changed, and which
policies have particularly affected them?
A:
Since 1986, when the Reagan administration gave amnesty to farmworkers who’d
been in this country working for three years, workers who replaced them have
had to live in the shadows. We’ve needed the immigrants to do our dirty work,
but they have received no welcome.
Our
guest worker program (known as H2A), and started the same year of 1986, has
made it legal to bring workers here without the rights of potential citizenship
(as the Braceros program did in the ‘40s), but long-term recognition of their contributions
to our farm system has not been forthcoming.
Many
of these people are treated as pariahs within the American system (as I
witnessed at a Phoenix rally and wrote about) even as they do all of the grunt labor
for us.
This
lack of recognition of our connection to Mexican people is one of the reasons I
made my pilgrimage to the border. Recognition
of their contributions is the first step toward reform, I believe.
Q:
Of the various places you visited in your research for this project, were there
some that made an especially deep impression on you?
A:
I’ll tell one story: When I arrived at Ciudad Juarez (known in some circles as
“Murder City”) I thought my wife and I’d be whisked away to hide somewhere to
show my film and give a lecture behind a university wall. Instead, through my
friend who invited us, I found myself interacting with farmworkers on both
sides of the border.
The
book opens with a scene in the Benito Juarez Park interacting with about 200
ex-Bracero workers who lined up for me to take their photographs. Their stories
and faces remain with me to this day. I’ll never be the same after that.
For
one thing, the Braceros story shows that we in the U.S. have long been deeply
involved in Mexico. We can’t just put up a wall and act as if this relationship
isn’t our responsibility, too. Mexico is our next-door neighbor and no wall
will ever obscure that fact.
Q:
You write, “Simple lines can’t contain people.” How do you think this border
should be dealt with in future?
A:
This is a complex problem that requires a multifaceted solution. For starters,
we should recognize that we’ve help create Mexico as it is today. Our policies
since the 19th century have helped define it. Our policies of slavery played
directly into the Mexican-American War, for example. We’ve not always been the
good guys in this two-sided story.
Today
our demand for drugs and our arms sold to Mexico have worsened our mutual drug
problem. Drugs and violence are not their problems; they’re our problems!
Regardless
of laws and walls and police, the interplay between our countries will
continue. As long as inequality exists, and maybe after, there will be
migration. My hope is that Mexico can continue to develop its economy and that
we can also appreciate Mexico’s strong contribution to our own economy.
We
are so interdependent. It’s time we admitted that, at the border and elsewhere.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I completed a film about the Bracero photography exhibit and that’s on my
borderodyssey.com website. I hope people will see that extensive site that
includes hundreds of photos.
I’m
also working on a new book idea about how our agricultural myths of the family
farm have helped create a broken narrative about agriculture; one which
obscures the fact that we’ve always had non-landowners doing much of the grunt
work of farming.
Thomas
Jefferson’s simultaneous championing of the yeomanry and his ownership of
slaves is a dissonant fact that will begin the new book. I’m hoping to spend
extensive time at Monticello for my research.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
This is not a book about policy change. It’s not a wonky book. It’s, as one
reviewer put it, a cry from the heart. It’s a pilgrimage, a lament…a hope for
change. It’s a travel book, and mostly it’s about people and their stories.
Like Steinbeck, I felt that to understand America, I had to get going and see
it by experiencing it. I hope readers will want to go along for the ride!
I
also found that there’s a lot to this that is invisible. I had to also become
an archaeologist of the invisible to uncover some things worth knowing.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
Great interview, Charlie! I'm happy to see this dream book of yours finally published. Without dialogue, there is no hope.
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